Hey genius - the OP was about how disgustingly fat Michael Moore is. Get over it. Dude's really fat. What - are you his boyfriend or something?
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Yeah, because I live in Nevada and our hospitals are shit.
Seriosuly though the benefits (financial and care quality) of having all claims and care management in one place are enormous.
Look old people have medicare. That is national health insurance. Most doctors get paid a decent amount under medicare - some complain (it's not the best reimbursment formula). Medicares does like to leave the medical managment (and risk) on to private insurers but that's only for some 40% of medicare enrollees (the rest enroll direct). Medicare's costs are not nearly as high as you would expect for an >65 or disabled population (think $600-$700 a month per member iirc).
Jer, I'm skinny...will you listen to me??
For the record I'm actually for the most communistic approach to healthcare. I can go on forever about things I'd like to see but will probably never happen.
Jer is just jealous that he can't make millions like Michael Moore can running his mouth.
OK, setting my stodgy principles of limited government aside; is there anyplace in the world with a socialized health care system that provides better care to it's patients than we do, today?
All I hear about is long waiting lists for simple surgeries in places like Canada and France. Sure, you are guaranteed health care if you live there, but it might take two years for them to get to you. This doesn't sound like an improvement to me.
So instead of having one federal office full of bureaucrats buying the nation it's socialist tongue depressors by the billion we have 50 different offices only they buy them by the million.
Seems way more efficient to me :rolleyes:
You listen to the wrong sources and spout about stuff you nothing about. Even after being repeatedly bitch slapped with your own stupidity and called out over your crass disregard for others.
It's all about local control and the ability to opt out(move to a different state). Two things you don't have with the federal gov. At least on the local level you have the chance of some accountability.
Silly me, I'm a big states rights guy. I actually believe the 10th amendment when it said:
"The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people."
Just one of many, many examples I have heard about.Quote:
You listen to the wrong sources and spout about stuff you nothing about.
http://www.tetongravity.com/forums/s...49&postcount=1
Call a specialist right now...any one will do. when is their first available appointment??
Waiting times would be the function of the number of Doctors and efficiency of the healthcare facility you are dealing with. it has nothing to do with the entity that would pay your claims or collect your premium. If we use a fee-for-service system and not a salary based system for docs all the sam incentives to crank through patients would still be there. Now if we don't pay doctors enough then that would probably lower the number of doctors which could increase wait times...we won't let that happen.
Perhaps since more people will have access to regular care then perhaps waits would increase for normal stuff. But ERs that deal with those that have no insurance would likely have less waits. Simple solution, pay for medical school for the best and brightest. perhaps create shorter more specialized programs (like PAs) for certain specialties - I dunno. Rewarding docs that achieve the best outcomes is a necessity too.
Look there are ways to do this and do it to save money and make care better. It is a huge leap that scares a lot of people though. Change is automatically bad if you are one of the beneficiarys of the current system.
edit - to make some paragraphs
I still say he's fat. I stand by my words.
It's most likely been stated already, but just saw this thread.
Anyways, obesity costs the health care system $100 billion per year. Sure, that statistic isn't entirely relevant to Moore pointing out what he thinks is wrong with the system. But rather, he is in fact contributing to the problem by remaining in his lardness matter for such an extended period of time.
If you could pay for it over there, you could pay for it here. So those who can do that are not the people who are the catalyst for this debate. So that fact has no relevance to this topic.
As usual, you are way to quick to pull that out.
Heterodoxy is healthy. Debate is healthy.
What's up with the fat Lefties? I mean, you've got wierd right-wing nutjobs, but they're all different: Ann Coulter - anorexic transformer, Orielly Factor - giant evil leprechaun, Rush Limbaugh - getting-skinnier ex-junkie. But the left wing douchebags are all fat: Mike Moore - fat bastard, Al Gore - fatter by the minute, Rosie Odonnel - fat lesbo.
I have a friend who had a large mole on her side. They ran some tests. It had metastasized. She was in to see the dermatologist within two week. Surgery to remove it was a month after that.
A couple of years ago my father was having a problem with his foot. He got a referral from his doctor and saw the podiatrist two weeks later.
I have a friend who had reconstructive surgery on his jaw. The almost identical surgery that bigtrubs is in line for. Three months from the time he got the referral to the specialist until the surgery was completed. It would have been sooner, but they pushed it back to allow him to finish the spring semester.
A couple of months is a lot better than a year and a half. Maybe the experiences of the people I know are not the norm.
I guess we are going to have to agree to disagree.
People are really quick to talk about how bad our system is, but everything I see points to it being better than anywhere else in the world.
It depends on how one measures "better care". But for at least one recent analysis, there's about 36 "better" ones:
http://findarticles.com/p/articles/m...29/ai_66011865
http://www.cantonrep.com/index.php?C...subCategoryID=
Everything you're willing to absorb. Everything else is just wrong.
What's really nuts is how much we, as Americans, really do believe that our health system is better. That's the far overriding opinion of most Americans.
So your first proposition here is incorrect.
What is interesting is looking at some statistics that say otherwise. The only reasonable footing for continuing to insist that U.S. healthcare is better is at least enumerating why these studies that place America's helth care system at 37th in the world is flawed.
What's really, really fucked up is how the U.S. system is clogged by poor hypochondriacs which make it unpossible for people with real but less frequent ailments to get attention. Try working in an E.R.
Well, from the first article you linked to, this might have something to do with the ranking:
"Health statistics for each country were collected from individual agencies and ministries, assuring wide disparities in definition, reporting technique, and collection methodology. Indeed, the report concedes, that, "in all cases, [here are multiple and often conflicting sources of information," if sources at all. For the many nations that simply do not maintain health statistics, the WHO "developed [data] through a variety of techniques" Without consistent and accurate data from within a single country, how can meaningful comparison be made among 191 different countries?"
The second article mentioned that:
"For starters, the American system doesn't measure up worldwide in controlling chronic diseases, such as diabetes or hypertension. "
There are lifestyle choices that strongly influence these diseases. I hardly think American's lazy lifestyle is a fault of the medical system. Yet it influences our "ranking" among other industrialized nations.
And one more thing, from the second article:
"Kidney disease patients on dialysis have a higher risk of death in the United States. By an act of Congress in 1972, all end-stage renal disease is covered by Medicare, even for patients younger than 65. But because of Medicare funding cuts, patients on dialysis receive less time on dialysis than patients in Europe and Japan. That helps explain why Americans on kidney dialysis have a mortality rate of 23 percent compared with 15 percent in Europe and 9 percent in Japan, according to a May 2002 report in JAMA."
So it would seem that government involvement has made things worse, not better.
and one last quote:
"Payment systems reward doctors for doing procedures, not for managing those chronic conditions, so a world-class center -- such as Boston's Joslin Diabetes Center, which is supported by philanthropy -- stands in stark contrast to results seen by regular doctors treating the disease in average patients."
So again, bureaucrats making decisions for other people has not improved the situation, just the opposite; and people want to hand more control over to government and bureaucrats?:nonono2:
This is so true. I don't know how to get around it though.Quote:
What's really, really fucked up is how the U.S. system is clogged by poor hypochondriacs which make it unpossible for people with real but less frequent ailments to get attention. Try working in an E.R.
I concede I tried to find something to help you, kind of ease you in, Cato like.
I think this last statement is where we can get a platform. We agree there's a problem.Quote:
This is so true. I don't know how to get around it though.
I think we also agree that the bureaucrats fuck things most of the times.
But I think that where we differ is whether or not there is such a thing as a "free market".
The existence of bureaucrats preclude a "free market", both those in the government and those behind the executive or more shadowy private corporate veneer.
Nobody is going to protect you from the illusions of a free market like those perpetrated by the industrial or textile barons of the 19th century or the filth, starvation and disease of the labor classes of the time. Unions may suck, but when they were created, there was a need. Now, they're just another corrupt organism.
But health care is a problem that needs to be addressed. A government solution is better than no solution at all.
And if the government is failing, you've nobody but yourself to blame.
Your entire argument rests on the concept that a claims adjuster working for the government is a bureaucrat, whereas the same claims adjuster working the same job for a multibillion dollar corporation is, somehow, not a bureaucrat.
This would be comical if it wasn't such a widely held belief with such serious consequences. :nonono2:
Now let's cue the classic management essay "On the Folly of Rewarding A, While Hoping For B," (Kerr, S., 1975, Academy of Management Journal, Vol. 18, pp. 769-783)
The purpose of an insurance company is to make money for its owners. They make money by collecting your premiums, and lose money by providing medical care. Therefore, any private insurance system will always take as much money from you as they can, and deliver as little medical care as they can. This is why our health care isn't as good as many countries with public systems: it's not the objective.
Now let's address efficiency. Here is a partial list of huge costs of a private healthcare system that get smaller or go away under a public system:
1) Gigantic CEO and executive salaries. No one in the public sector makes $100 million, or even $1 million. $100 million buys a lot of healthcare for a lot of people.
2) Corporate profits in general. If a company makes $300 million in profit in a fiscal year, that's $300 million that could have bought healthcare or been returned to taxpayers under a public system.
3) The majority of emergency room visits, especially in cities, are not emergencies: they're poor people with nowhere else to go and who delay treatment for routine things until it's an emergency. Preventative care is a lot cheaper, even for people who never pay a dime into the system, unless you're willing to go to a completely private system where hospitals can refuse to treat dying patients if they can't find proof of insurance or a means of payment on their person.
4) More efficient paperwork. If everyone is eligible and there is only one payer, you don't need bureaucrats to figure out who's eligible and how to deny coverage. You still need them to process claims, but you need a lot less of them.
It's like no-fault auto insurance: frequently it's cheaper just to pay the claim that it is to pay lawyers and adjusters to argue about whose fault it is and who is or isn't covered.
5) More productive workforce. If people can stay healthy, they can keep working. Long-term disability (which we ALREADY HAVE) is a lose-lose for everyone, and you're a lot more likely to turn a minor injury or illness into a disabling injury if you can't afford to see a doctor.
Basically, there are only two options that make sense: a fully public system, or a fully private pay-as-you go system, where hospitals can refuse to admit anyone who can't pay.
No what was being pointed out was that if you felt that a Natonal Healthcare system would not provide adequate levels of care for your own personal agenda there was a thriving market providing secondary private health insurance.
The system was pointed out to you because at that particular time you were wadding your knickers about the indignity of being stood toward the back of a line of people poorer and therefore apparently less deserving of treatment than you.
Having made that even clearer perhaps you would now explain how health care in this country can be distributed in a less arbitrary way than simply the wealthiest first. Or if you prefer perhaps show me anywhere else in the world where people are clamoring to adopt the U.S. model rather than what I/we are advocating?